Generates a POT file.
Here is a translator work flow with the generator.
You create .pot file by pot formatter:
% rdoc --format pot
It generates doc/rdoc.pot.
You create .po file from doc/rdoc.pot. This operation is needed only the first time. This work flow assumes that you are a translator for Japanese.
You create locale/ja/rdoc.po from doc/rdoc.pot. You can use msginit provided by GNU gettext or rmsginit provided by gettext gem. This work flow uses gettext gem because it is more portable than GNU gettext for Rubyists. Gettext gem is implemented by pure Ruby.
% gem install gettext % mkdir -p locale/ja % rmsginit --input doc/rdoc.pot --output locale/ja/rdoc.po --locale ja
Translate messages in .po
You translate messages in .po by a PO file editor. po-mode.el exists for Emacs users. There are some GUI tools such as GTranslator. There are some Web services such as POEditor and Tansifex. You can edit by your favorite text editor because .po is a text file. Generate localized documentation
You can generate localized documentation with locale/ja/rdoc.po:
% rdoc --locale ja
You can find documentation in Japanese in doc/. Yay!
You need to update translation when your application is added or modified messages.
You can update .po by the following command lines:
% rdoc --format pot % rmsgmerge --update locale/ja/rdoc.po doc/rdoc.pot
You edit locale/ja/rdoc.po to translate new messages.
Description of this generator